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- Surface Winds - NASA Earthdata
Surface winds refer to the wind speed and direction measured from the surface of Earth’s land or ocean By studying these winds, scientists can learn more about ocean processes and improve predictions of extreme weather NASA’s available data products useful to the study of surface winds include average wind speed and direction, sea level pressure, and surface stress
- SeaWinds - NASA Earthdata
The SeaWinds instrument, which flew on NASA's Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) satellite and NASA JAXA's ADEOS-II, was a A Ku-band (13 4 GHz) scatterometer featuring a circular dish antenna, which provides pencil-beam radar backscatter measurements SeaWinds provided all-weather ocean surface wind vector measurements over Earth's ice-free global oceans The instrument was designed to improve
- The Power of a Brazilian Wind - NASA Earthdata
People often picture wind turbines rooted in waving fields of golden grass, but wind turbines can also stand among the waves of coastal waters Offshore wind offers more than just clean and economical energy; winds over the ocean can often be faster and fluctuate less than land-based winds, leading to higher and more sustained output Offshore wind sites tend to be naturally close to the large
- Monsoons - NASA Earthdata
Monsoons data from NASA provides global insight into the formation and behavior of these seasonal wind and rain phenomena
- Tropical Cyclones | NASA Earthdata
Earth observation data are vital in planning for and dealing with the many hazards from tropical cyclones, such as storm surge, flooding, extreme winds, tornadoes, and lightning Over the past 50 years, tropical cyclones have killed more than 779,000 people and caused more than $1 4 trillion in economic losses worldwide, according to the WMO
- Lake Effect Snow - NASA Earthdata
Lake effect snow data collected by NASA are integral for efforts to understand patterns of snowfall accumulation, among other investigations
- Little Islands, Big Wake - NASA Earthdata
Trade winds blow from east to west, intensifying between the islands and weakening in the islands’ wakes The finding that a small island chain can have such a great impact on the Pacific Ocean is significant to the future of ocean observation, Xie said “If you look at a large region of the Pacific Ocean, you can barely see the Hawaiian
- Forecasting and Understanding Mountain Gap Winds: A Machine . . . - Earthdata
High winds led to increased heat and moisture fluxes into the storm, and frictional convergence associated with the ingestion of higher momentum air aided in providing moisture lift which affected precipitation patterns across the eastern Pacific
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